BMW X6 M

Editors' Rating

Price Starting at

$105,095

Shop Local Cars

Build and Price

Price Starting at

$105,095

Shop Local Cars

Build and Price

Overview

The X6 M is a style item: it has sleek lines, a plush interior, and a coveted badge on the hood. It’s also stunningly quick and handles more like a sports car than anything that weighs 5000 pounds has any right to. It’s powered by a 567-hp twin-turbo V-8. An eight-speed automatic and all-wheel drive are standard, and up to 100 percent of torque can be routed to either the front or rear wheels, depending on driving conditions. It’s less practical than the boxy X5 M, but it’ll turn more heads.

Articles By Year

2017 BMW X6 M

The M is for Mighty Quick.

When is an SUV not an SUV? That’s a question posed by the BMW X6 M, which has limited off-road capability and not much utility but a lifted ride height and extraordinary performance ability. Take a moment to let this sink in: The 567-hp X6 M’s 3.8-second zero-to-60-mph time nearly matched that of the 560-hp M6 Gran Coupe. The 5190-pound X6 M also stopped from 70 mph in just 153 feet, bettering the 795-pound-lighter M6 by 15 feet (although that M6 may have had some glazed brake pads). And it circled our skidpad at 0.98 g—0.06 g beyond what the low-slung sedan was capable of. The X6 M’s performance isn’t just astounding for an SUV; it’s astounding, period.

While the sticky rubber does wonders for the X6 M’s grip, the thin sidewalls take a toll on the hunchbacked hatchback’s ride quality. The X6 M’s suspension is jarringly stiff. Standard adaptive dampers with three modes offer Comfort, Sport, and Sport+ settings, but they only alter the suspension’s compliance from graphite to granite.

In any setting, though, the X6 M’s chassis reacts predictably and with minimal body roll, abetted by a quick-reacting all-wheel-drive system that not only can send as much as 100 percent of the engine’s torque to the rear axle, but also can apportion torque between the two rear wheels or even overdrive the outside wheel to combat understeer and aid cornering. Stab the throttle, and with the stability control switched to its most permissive setting, this all-wheel-drive SUV can even be goaded into a drift—try that in your mom’s crossover. Better yet, don’t.

Throttle sensitivity can be altered among Eco, Sport, and Sport+ settings, and there are three more to adjust the speed and logic by which the torque-converter-equipped automatic swaps cogs. Manual control of the transmission is available by tapping on the X6 M’s stubby shift lever or by flicking the aluminum paddle shifters mounted to the backside of the meaty steering wheel.

As is common in modern BMWs, the X6 M’s electrically assisted steering is devoid of any substantial feel or feedback. It’s relatively quick in hand despite a 17.9:1 overall ratio, and the driver can adjust the steering’s weight via—yes—three different modes. To keep X6 M drivers from being overwhelmed by the multitude of performance settings, BMW provides a pair of steering-wheel-mounted buttons that can call up two different customizable combinations.

Although the powertrain offers an Eco mode, you’ll probably be unsurprised to learn that fuel economy is not the X6 M’s strong suit; EPA estimates are 14 mpg city and 19 mpg highway. We got 16 mpg during the course of the X6 M’s stay with us, matching the feds’ combined figure. The bulky BMW did manage to beat its EPA rating on our 75-mph highway fuel-economy loop, however, returning 21 mpg.

M Is for Mo’ Money

Inside, the X6 M’s wide dashboard benefits from the addition of a new touchscreen infotainment system that runs BMW’s iDrive 5.0 software. Navigation is standard, and BMW’s iDrive controller knob remains for those who prefer to keep the 10.2-inch touchscreen free of messy fingerprints. Our Melbourne Red Metallic X6 M also featured Apple CarPlay compatibility for $300. Other options on our test car included BMW’s Parking Assistant self-parking feature for $500 and a pair of packages: the $1700 Driving Assistance Plus package and the $4700 Executive package. The former includes items such as a 360-degree camera, blind-spot monitoring, lane-departure warning, and automated emergency braking, while the latter package includes LED headlights with automatic high-beams, a head-up display, ventilated front seats, a heated steering wheel, heaters for the outboard rear seats, rear-window sunshades, wireless phone charging, a Wi-Fi hotspot, and soft-close doors. In total, our X6 M wore an as-tested price of $112,295.

With a starting sticker of $105,095, the 2017 BMW X6 M costs $3400 more than its mechanically identical X5 M counterpart. And yet the X6 M sacrifices 9 cubic feet of cargo space with the rear seat in use and 17 cubes with the 40/20/40 split-folding bench tucked away. Additionally, the X6 M loses an inch of rear-seat legroom and just under an inch of headroom compared with its boxier brother. Buyers of BMW’s fastback crossover likely would argue that those compromises and the X6 M’s additional cost are small sacrifices made in the name of additional style.

Although we prefer lower, lighter high-performance cars to high-performance SUVs, there is something to be said for a vehicle that provides so much performance in such an unlikely package. But the X5 M offers similar genre-busting capabilities, and we struggle to wrap our heads around the concept of paying more for the less practical X6 M.